Voosher
"British Ale Tragic" D.B. 2006
- Joined
- 7/3/06
- Messages
- 539
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I just dont know.... I'm really curious though as I have no doubt that some (or all) of my brews must have diacetyl.
I have been curious about Diacetyl ever since I became a member of this site and am still none the wiser. Cant someone just make little taster tubes and circulate them to members?
Maybe a "Lick and taste" card?
Is there a beer that has a signature diacetyl flavour. ie a beer I can go and buy to taste this elusive character?
cheers in confusion
ATOMT
As I mentioned earlier, I reckon you'd find it in Fullers beers primarily because of the 1968 yeast but they're never going to allow it to be obvious and dominant. Looks like I'm just going to have to grab some London Pride and ESB to check. Damn you.
Taste and smell are notoriously individual senses. Two people can taste the same thing and describe it in completely different ways. I remember reading somewhere that every human's sense of taste is essentially unique albeit with some peoples' senses of taste being closer than others.
I was never convinced that I knew the diacetyl flavour until recently. I wouldn't describe it as "butterscotch" which is the most common description I've heard. I think the "buttered popcorn" description is closer for my palate. The mouthfeel is buttery and the taste is caramelly for mine. And yes, I know a lot of people will say "that's butterscotch". :blink:
I don't think that diacetyl is common in most home brews. Most home brewers use yeast which is not prone to heavy diacetyl production and ferment at temps which discourage diacety retention (20-22C)